No, it's an (approximate) description of nature, because it's a theory, and because it agrees with experiments, as long as you don't measure things with too much precision. (All theories are "made up" by the way).
Now we are back to a fundamental difference. As I pointed out, using Google searches (I doubt anybody looked at them, but oh well), statements like "Newton was wrong" or "Newton's Law of Gravity is wrong" only appear on Creationist websites.
Laws are called Laws because they work, not only to predict but to design and modify reality. If they don't, they are not considered laws of physics.
Some LOPs only are valid for certain spacetime situations, or are ideal laws, but that doesn't mean they are not LOPs. It means you have to know a lot more than an Internet forum can explain to know why they are still used, everyday, all the time. And people who claim they don't work are viewed with suspicion.
Like any good theory, it provides an approximate description or reality, or equivalently, an exact description of a fictional universe that's a useful model of our own.
We may be saying the same thing here. But nobody I know, in the real world, would say the LOPs are not laws. That would be creationism talk.
You keep showing that you're willing to hold on to your delusions like a creationist on crack.
What is so damn funny, is you are making that claim about famous and well respected scientific principles, backed up by hundreds of years of science and research. I'm not making anything up, I just steal from physics texts and respected scientist.
So every time somebody is claiming I am wrong, I just laugh about it.
Just like I laugh at stuff like this:
Almost all high school physics students are required to learn Newton's three "laws" of gravitation. These "laws" are presented as Absolute Truth, and many former students can still recite them from memory. However, we have known since the beginning of the 20th Century that these "laws" are nothing of the kind; Einstein's theory of general relativity is not at all compatible with Newton's "laws", and relativity has been experimentally demonstrated to be correct on numerous occasions. Newton's "laws" break down at large-scale levels (for instance, Newtonian mechanics cannot be used to accurately describe the orbit of the planet Mercury.) Relativity, on the other hand, is consistent and measurably correct on virtually all levels, with the possible exception of situations involving extreme mass and energy where quantum effects can no longer be ignored.
Newton's defenders say "well, okay .. perhaps Newtonian mechanics is not universally correct, but it works very well for situations here on Earth, and in that context it is very accurate." That is all well and good, but the fact remains that Newton was wrong, but physics instructors teach his "laws" anyway. And they are 100% justified in doing so. There is no way in hell that we should expect high school students to be able to understand the ramifications of general relativity. It's weird, wacky, and difficult stuff. Why can't we do the same thing with creationism? Why should we expect these impressionable children to be able to deal with the cold reality that is biological evolution?
http://www.adequacy.org/stories/2002.1.17.225621.189.html
So when I see some ignorant internet spew, about Newton being wrong, I think closet creationist. No credible scientist would say Newton was wrong about gravity. That is absurd.